Te Vaka - "We Know the Way" Live with Orchestra Wellington 2018
Вставка
- Опубліковано 25 лип 2018
- Songs of Moana concert live at the Michael Fowler Centre.
Sound recording: RNZ Music
Sound production: Startrek Studios
Video: JXLive
www.tevaka.com
Facebook.com/OfficialTeVaka
Instagram @Te_Vaka
Twitter @Tevaka
FULL LYRICS AND TRANSLATIONS TO THE EXTENDED VERSIONS OF BOTH TRACKS
Introduction - Tulou Tagaloa (full version)
Tulou Tagaloa
Sei e va’ai mai
I le tatou lalolagi
Sei e va’ai mai
I le matou lalolagi
Sei e malamalama
E lelei ma le manaia
Sei e va’ai maia
Manaia o le tatou olaga
"Tatau Na Fai"
E iei te mea tatau na fai
E iei koe
To lagona
Kautu ko ve
Fakamakeke
To lagona
Ke iloa faiga
E iei te mea tatau na fai
E iei koe
To lagona
Kautu ko ve to lagona vena
Sei e va'ai maia
Manaia o le tatou olaga
TRANSLATION
Respectfully calling
The God of the Sea
So you can see
Our world
So you can see
My world
So you understand
How beautiful and good
So you can see
Our wonderful way of life
There’s a task that needs to be done
It’s all there with you
You feel it
It's centred on that
Stay strong
You feel it
And you know how
There’s a task that needs to be done
It’s all there with you
You feel it
It's centred on what you feel there
So you can see
Our wonderful way of life
WE KNOW THE WAY (Full version)
Verse 1
Tatou o tagata folau e vala’auina
E le atua o le sami tele e o mai
Ua ava’e le lu’itau e lelei
Tapenapena
verse 2
Ua malamalama uiga o le moana
Va’ai I fetu ma isi failoga e maua ai ala
O nu’u fou avea mo tatou aiga
chorus
Aue aue
nuku i mua
Te manulele e tataki e
Aue aue
te fenua te malie
Nae ko hakilia mo kaiga e
Verse 3
We read the wind and the sky
When the sun is high
We sail the length of the sea
On the ocean breeze
At night we name every star
We know where we are
We know who we are who we are
Aue aue we set a course to find
A brand new island everywhere we roam
Aue aue we keep our island in our mind
And when it’s time to find home
We know the way
bridge
Aue aue we are explorers reading every sign
We tell our stories of our elders
In a never ending chain
We aren’t afraid of the horizon line
We know what came before us
We know the way
WE KNOW THE WAY - Translations
Verse 1
We are voyagers
summoned by the gods
of this mighty ocean to come
we take up the good challenge
get ready
verse 2
We understand the ways of the sea
we look to the stars and other signs
to find our way
to find new lands
to make our home
chorus
oh! oh!
there is land up ahead
a bird in flight to take us there
oh! oh!
this beautiful land
the place i was looking for
to make our home
Lyrics and translation to the unreleased extension to "Tulou Tagaloa":
E IEI TE MEA TATAU NA FAI - there’s a task that needs to be done
E IEI KOE - it’s all there with you
TO LAGONA - you feel it
KAUTU KO VE - it’s centred on that
FAKAMAKEKE - stay strong
TO LAGONA - you feel it
KE ILOA FAIGA - and you know how
E IEI TE MEA TATAU NA FAI - there’s a task that needs to be done
E IEI KOE - it’s all there with you
TO LAGONA - you feel it
KAUTU KO VE TO LAGONA VENA - it’s centred on what you feel there
SEI E VA’AI MAIA - so you can see
MANAIA O LE TATOU OLAGA - our wonderful way of life
For full lyrics and translations: www.opetaiafoai.com/translations
.
Te Vaka ev Se Le s skew
Te Vaka hhczK
Te Vaka Thank you...How beautiful.
❤️❤️❤️
Every song in Moana is perfectly beautiful but *THIS SONG* strikes my soul.. it’s as if it’s sending current in my spine that it gives me chills ... This song is my favorite in the entire movie
It’s so beautiful 😍.
I love this culture.
I am with you.
Same here,
I so much love this song
Mine too!
me too
When you realize how HUGE the Pacific Ocean is, you really get a sense of the bravery of the ancient wayfinders.
the Pacific Ocean is the largest water mass on the planet. With a surface area of more than 155 million square kilometers (60 million square miles), this ocean basin is larger than the landmass of all the continents combined. Additionally, it contains almost twice as much water as the world's second largest body of water, the Atlantic Ocean.
@@ivespoken8902 everyone already knew tgat
@@jakolby6511 you would be surprised
@@ivespoken8902 The Pacific covers 30% and the Atlantic 20% and I sure as hell would prefer to sail in the Pacific than the Atlantic.
@@D1str1ct why
As a Samoan boy who was born in Guam and then was raised in the states...I couldn’t help but cry when I heard this song in the movie. It’s truly inspiring to understand where I came from. Luckily, I was raised in a Samoan church and went to Vaisala in 2008. When I heard this song I couldn’t help but smile for my ancestors. We made it and we are still HERE.
👏🏻 facts..never lose sight of your roots
I cried as well when I heard this song in the movie. I'm a Maori girl far from home living in the US as well. It touched my heart in a powerful way reminding me we truly are voyagers still to this day!
(sniff)
Im a Samoan and so proud of our culture.
@@christiangibbs8534 who's cutting onions😭
The chant at the beginning is a common chant for people who lives in the pacific, from ibatan, ifugaos and babaylans in the Philippines to the Maoris and Polynesians to the natives in the Americas, we are deeply connected by our past, the oceans and nature connects us, which makes you wonder, with technology all over the place why are getting more and more disconnected? And I think one of the reason is our disrespect for mother nature.
I think its from our disrespect for everything, nature, ourselves, each other, our futures and pasts. I think we've become enveloped in all the wrong things as a whole, every modern culture is guilty of it regardless of color, religion, or demographic. I think its also why mental health is declining at an alarming rate as well, it's very sad to see.
Really? Saan po ba ako makakabasa tungkol diyan? Gusto ko marining yung ganyang chants sa mga babaylan. May link po kayo?
Day-eng. Para siyang uhm....sinisigaw na may konteng tono.😅 Tapos sabi ni mama, gibberish sya o walang tunay na kahulugan bukod sa parang tinatawag ang mga espiritu o mga ganun.
Ewan ko lang pero parang parehong pareho yung style ng pagkanta ni sir dito sa video sa pagkanta ng mga lokal singers dito sa highland. Tapos yung pronunciation parang pamilyar.
Naalala ko tuloy yung lokal (Igorot) band dito na "Salidumay." Sikat dito sa Benguet yung kanta nilang "Danum" (subukan nyo pong pakinggan ta maganda talaga instrumental niya, tatak katutubo).
@@mountainrock7682
Hello po. Kung gusto po ninyo pakinggan ang isang halimbawa ng chant o "day-eng" ng mga Igorot/Kordilyeran, ito po ang link:
ua-cam.com/video/StdCqJ9qCiU/v-deo.html
@@queenberuthiel5469 Maraming salamat!
As a Hawaiian decendent this makes me very emotional, my culture is disappearing slowly and this helps connect us to our ancestors and traditions that is shared across all Polynesians islands. Mahalo and much love.
As a Mi'kmaq I hope they make another film for native americans. I want it to be pre-colonial. If not, at least make it about reservation life like Smoke Signals.
@UCb_W8mipgssrf8xvOBKcoIw I don't see Disney doing that. For all of their desperation to appear inclusive and "woke", they're still a deeply conservative mega corporation and appeasing their white, cis-heteronormative, Christian fundamentalist audience and shareholders is still their top priority, and Disney does NOT want to lose them. So if they can keep getting away with doing the bare fucking minimum of effort for representation and being praised for it, they're going to do it.
A good step in the right direction would be to hire Taika Waititi, or other native non-white director, and just fund whatever projects they have on the back burner but have not been able to focus solely on due to not having enough money to actualize it, and then step back. Fund the project, give the director access to all of their best equipment that they give to Joss Whedon, James Gunn, and other "prestigious" white directors, assure them that money is no object-- Disney will cover salaries, fees, transportation, lodging, meals, ALL accommodations. Let the director hire whoever they want for the project, that way they can have all native/non-white cast, script writer(s), editors, production team; every single position that needs to be filled working on the film, let the director hire whoever they want so Disney themselves don't have to worry about meeting a "quota" of hiring enough experts belonging to the culture they're basing their movie on, just let the director pick! Then when filming and production has wrapped, market the shit out of it! Promote that film with a bunch of advertisements everywhere! Create an official Twitter and have someone from the culture run that baby so Disney doesn't have to worry about any controversies that might occur from accidentally hiring a White Nationalist because Disney didn't bother to vet anyone before hiring them on. Smack down and fucking publicly humiliate any racist trolls who bellyache about Disney being "ruined by WoKe CuLtUrE" and cry about "reverse racism", "racist against white people" and "White Guilt"/"Self-hate" or other alt-right dogwhistles they like to toss around and call them out on their internalized racism and show up for their fans that are a part of those marginalized groups that are targets of hate speech. If China threatens not to show the movie in their country unless it's heavily edited to appeal to their market or scrapped completely, Disney would tell them to go fuck themselves and release the film anyway and show that they're above whatever kickbacks they usually receive from the Chinese government for sending their films to their cinemas as it's guaranteed easy money because they recoup whatever money they they put into making the movies (or if it's considered a "flop" here in America, they end up netting a profit when they send it overseas to be promoted and shown in China) or from Chinese co-productions.
It would be awesome if Disney did even half of that, but the reality is that they're not going to. Pleasing Karen the white middle-class soccer mom that believes "God created Adam and Eve not Adam and Steve" with her mini-van full of shrieking children (4 - 5 of which are her own) with a MAGA bumper sticker in the back window who brags about how "she doesn't see color" and that "we're all the same race, the human race" but will flip a tit if you even suggest that a (cis) black woman is as pretty or prettier than her and will resort to typical racist insults about "r*t this" and "g*****a that" and "mannish features" and brags in her Facebook Mommy groups about what a great subservient wifey she is to her military husband who 100% has her best friend bent over in the bed they sleep in and ramming her in various other places around their house while she's out running errands and herding children to different practices and appointments because their marriage that began right after high school graduation has gotten stale and routine, and since she can no longer please him as is her wifely duty, he's fucking her best friend, the barely legal babysitter, his female colleagues and coworkers and who will rally those Facebook Mommies into boycotting The Mouse and frozen Walt-sicle buried under the Matterhorn, or Pirates of the Caribbean (depending on who you ask) who was definitely a racist, misogynistic, homophobic guy... is Disney's main concern (after their white company shareholders and the Chinese government). The Walt Disney Company is not looking to sever that tie with their conservative audience even with all of their laughable attempts to "fix" their classic movies and make them more "woke" and "progressive" (because their understanding of "progressivism" and "representation" is a conservative one, but from a Conservative Democratic perspective which is far more conservative than the Left but nowhere near conservative enough for the Republicans, aka The Alt-Right).
I don't hold out hope for Disney doing anything really that special when it comes to progressive representation. Hell I really don't expect that from any of the major studio labels. But I still hope for non-white creatives to get in there and take up space by telling their own stories and hopefully, a decent studio will deem them worthy of funding for their projects.
Ah why is it disappearing
The opening song to lilo and stitch is one my favourite disney songs and it’s how I first learned about Hawaii from the Netherlands
same im from samoa and hawaii tho really love it
I have to admit that every time I hear these traditional songs from Moana, I cry. Probably tears of joy. The beat just strikes my heart. Even though I don't understand the words, I feel happy. This is beautiful. ❤️
ha! you're not alone, i cry too
this is not a traditional song, its a song from disney movie Moana
I feel you 😂
@@pookiesnooches1261 uhhhhh that's literally what she typed - "songs from Moana". 🤦♂️
Pookie Snooches fail
I remember when I first watched Moana with my family, The Big boats appeared and my Tongan dad looked proudly at the screen, turned to me and pointed and said, “Those were our people” I’ve never felt so much pride in my heritage. Despite being Tongan and having a native Tongan dad, I was still widely disconnected from my culture. Seeing those ships and our people sail them was like hearing music for the first time.
I can feel it🤗 Greetz from Germany🇩🇪
Luv from Fiji🇫🇯 to Tonga❤
Luv from Fiji🇫🇯 to Tonga❤
Luv from Fiji🇫🇯 to Tonga❤
From one islander to another, greetings! 🇵🇭 🇹🇴
“We tell the stories of our elders through a never ending chain” 🥺
As someone with Indigenous American & Mexican ancestry, this particular line hits me right in the soul and brings a tear to my eye every single time. So beautiful. Much love to the beautiful Polynesian people! I feel like we’re cousins lol
I’m indigenous Alaskan, I feel that too. Rewatched Moana last night I felt so connected , so much joy that this movie gave me that Pocahontas did not
This song will hit you hard if you're indigenous also hello from your Maya brothers and sisters
@Priti Singer True, the chant in the beginning is a pretty common chant to tribes here in the Philippines. Just shows that there's more connection between Filipinos and Polynesians than the theory that the Polynesian ancestors came from Asia and sailed east during the age of early humans. And ancient Filipinos are closely tied to waters as well even to this day, i mean, the badjao people still exist to this day and they live in some sort of raft houses and they dive underwater for like 8 minutes to catch fish with no equipment but googles and a spear.
That line sends shivers down my spine
man the scene with the ray, WHY NOONE TALKS ABOUT THE SCENE WITH THE RAY I FUCKING CRIED THERE JUST FOR THAT
Damn. We are all so rich of beautiful cultures around this world.
Thank you for this comment
Yes, isn't God wonderful?
You know where you are..
Yes ! That's why I can't hate Humans and humanity in general, we have too much beauties around the world !
@islanti yeah but if they were not here, the song would not be the same .. they are the reason why this song is good .
This culture just makes me cry tears of joy so much. Ugh this is beautiful.
@islanti That song was written before Moana came out you are fake news
Because deep in your soul your heart you know the way too...
Me too.
Even im a pilipino😭
Especially the part where stepping into the shadow of a chief could get you executed
@Mallory its true tho
0:37 Can you imagine the feeling of that woman calling out from a boat at night, in the middle of the Pacific ocean, with not a island in sight, only the neverending horizon and the jaw dropping night sky above her head? Imagine the silence interrupted only by whooshing of some waves... And then her voice is answered by her own echo from a distant island yet to find!!! 😮
...Did that beginning just gave me chills? My gosh, I think it did!!
This is so beautiful! I don’t understand why people don’t like it.
They have no culture, that’s why.
They have no soul
I agree but you have to admit that the dancing was a bit weird
Talibanns?? 🤪🤪
Their voices are beautiful, but they are calling out to a false god, as much as you want to like it, it would be wrong..
The Aztec Descendants is my story. I wish we could’ve preserved ours like this. Much love from Mexico
Has un guión sobre ellos. Aztecas.
Actually our stories are very well preserved and in fine condition as well, also as hawai'ians have their national language, we have nahuatl which is what we spoke and have words in modern spanish combined with it
@@Lucky_Kounna Exactly
I'm here for the taino culture. Puerto Rico sends love to you
Mine is from the Mayan's...Well half of my story is, cause I'm Half Guatemalan and my dad is pure Mayan Descendant...Anyways YOU TRAITORS!! 😆😆
as an Indonesian, moana brings me and my family together. My mom, a manadonese, often tell stories about how native manadonese like sanger and tanawangko always call the tagaloa before they sail. thank you disney for making me proud as an eastern indonesian
@Sarah Conner Indonesian people is totally diverse... But most of culture in eastern part of Indonesia have so many similarities with pacificians. In language, sacred entities, also history..... You can see in many parts of Sulawesi, mollucas, Nusa tenggara, also many parts of Papua...
@Sarah Conner yaps... Maybe you can compare how the Hawaiian or samoan people counting from 1-10 with my people (kei people, southeast mollucas) count those numbers... Hehe..
Andi Harlen indeed before Islam came in the Philippines and Indonesia, India and Polynesia were once the greatest traders and sea farers the world has ever seen.
@@davodxsuperstar yaps.... the Polynesian people can map their location through the landscape of the sky and star... but the western (middle east and European) need to make sure that the earth is round so they can't loss their way... Hehehe
@@andiharlen4543 doesnt mean anything just similarities in language and thats it
I don't care what ethnicity you are from, these kind of music, traditional, no matter what country, tribe or ethnicity it came from makes me cry. The man's voice is just so soothing. it's warm, like a grandpa's loving and caring embrace.
Esas son las palabras que describen exactamente esto que se siente en el corazón cuando escucho estas melodías. Es una alegría inmensa y ganas de estar nadando en el mar...
Exactly you couldn’t describe this more perfectly I’m North African and this music , tradition, and culture tugs on my heart in a way nothing else can I always get chills whenever i see or hear beauty.
@@lupitaa.castaneda9074Por fin un comentario en español y sí, siempre que escucho esa canción se conmueve mi corazón y me brotan unas cuantas lágrimas, la mejor canción de la película.
Aunque la del cangrejo gigante me gusta bastante también.
Mi película favorita, desde que la ví por primera vez, aunque ya fuera adulta.
same
I am just a Texas boy but every time I hear this it fills my bucket with happiness. It makes me want to go on an adventure.
I'm black, but popular movies in media like this and in the heights fill me with pride. Ancestor remembrance and veneration of any kind, really, is beautiful to me. Thank you for sharing your beautiful voices and culture with us
Yeah, makes you proud to be human. We are explorers.
I don't have a tribe. This makes me long for one.
As a Filipino.. We were thought how our ancestors sailed to the Philippines in boats called balangay or barangay.. Pinoys are Islanders..we had a very rich culture then the Spanish came and destroyed nearly everything..
Spaniards... They did the same in South America sadly... I understand you.
British did the same to Ireland and Scotland
Oh God, I'm Brazilian girl and I'm so into deep for Polynesian culture, people, all of their history... Looks like so amazing and wonderful! 💖💖💖💖💖
Yeah filipinos are our cousins from across the ocean. Love my pinoy usos. My kids are Filipino too
Cheers too all voyagers!
I am not polynesian myself but 14 years ago I fell in love with a polynesian boy, my high school sweetheart. He taught me about his culture and traditions . Although it didn't work our between us, I will never forget how deep, rich, and beautiful the polynesian culture is. I fell in love with the culture, the history and the stories. The polynesian culture is the perfect example of how to keep values, traditions and cultural practices in tact through thousands of year. The rest of the world must observe and learn from you. We must all remember our past, to have a future. We must remember we are all people OF this earth, not the people who created it. It created us. Thank you for teaching me that.
Polynesian cultureS. tonga, Tokelau, Samoa, Niue, Tahiti, Kiribati, Aotearoa ect all our culturs are different, as different as Inuit to Aztec.
please don't use words like "the Polynesian culture" because thats trying to state the is only one culture.
@@keikogutierrez5707 party pooper
@@jacold8451 in what way...
@@keikogutierrez5707 Dang why'd u respond? I was hopping that the comment goes unnoticed😞
@@keikogutierrez5707 coming from a Samoan, Cookie and Maori, I don't think it really matters
Proud to be the PACIFIC ISLANDER. I’m a Moluccan boy from eastern Indonesia. We share the same culture, language as well as myths and beliefs with you guys. We’re all Pacific People. Molo’uku / Maluku / Spice Islands is an archipelago in Western Melanesia and indeed we know who we are🔥. Mena!!
You are Asian
I love the interchangeable wordplay of “Aue aue” (Oh! Oh!) and “Away Away”
Both meanings are relevant in their respective languages in regards to a wayfaring song.
I love that - in foreign dubs of "We Know the Way" it always uses "aue, aue"
I'm a Filipino living in New Zealand, and I'm deeply connected with this song. It gives me chills everytime I hear it. Philippines have 7100 islands in the Pacific, perhaps we can call ourselves Islanders too. We are all brothers and sisters. Well done Samoa, this song is so beautiful. Love it!
Ako naman di ko maiintindihan baket naiiyak ako sa saya pag pinapakinggan ko to.
Nakaka antig damdamin..
Philippines is Asian. Stop trying to be Pacific Islanders
So Proud and Honor to be the French singer of This Song.
Makes me shivering in every languages...
Thanks you, Thank You, THAAAAAANK YOOOOUUUUU !!!! 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
an underrated comment
he (Vaubien) really sang the french version in the Moana official translation
@@Oradyn Whoa, that's so cool!!
Listened to the French version and you did a beautiful job sir, and what a song to be featured on, one of my favourites from any Disney movie. Great job and best of luck to you sir!
Wow so cool that you're one of the singers!!
Looked it up just to hear it. You did an amazing job.
Proud Islander 🇫🇯 ...... One of the greatest pieces of art
Filo❤️
Greetings from Java island, Indonesia, to our Polynesian cousins! We are Austronesian people who sailed from Taiwan to the islands in Indian and Pacific Ocean. We share the same blood and ancient culture. Long live Austronesian people!
God bless all the Pacific's Islands.
POLYNESIAN PRIDE 💪
I know we strong 💪🏿
@@selmayusuf7787 definitely 💓
You also an inspiration to everyone who believes in discovery and exploring the unknown.
Neiah Mataele Ayeeee
Do Filipinos count? I mean we do live on a lot of islands
I love Moana soundtrack.There's something in that language that gives me the biggest goosebumps!
Count me in 🙋♂️
Ikr,and Made me tears,tears of proud and joy
You hear our mana (power) .
the language of ancestors pass on and on it has deep and lovely meaning
Tokelauan if youre wondering what language is it
As a Fijian boy growing up learning how that great mountain god put his left foot in Fiji and Right foot in Samoa and gave birth to Tonga.
Tangaloa gave birth to Tonga Laho. Fiji related to png lol
Idk what it is I've never been into musicals too much but this song right here just does something to me... The Pacific islanders have such an amazing culture
Don't think I'm Polynesian at all, but this always makes me feel identified & the tears always come out
Me too. I honestly don't even understand(unfortunately) but it is so beautiful I can't stop crying.
SAME. i just think "we know the way" is a very powerful and meaningful sentiment these days. it's confidence, assuredness, accomplishment and competence and hope. not a lot of us have all those things these days.
Are u hapa?
Be proud of your heritage.. i'm a Scots/Gael keep it alive where you can!
I feel the same way. I feel identified even though this isn't my culture. This kind of validated how I've been feeling all along. Thank you for that
It's when the drums kick in, the rhythm starts, and the entire band begins to groove. There's so much to love about this. The language itself is seems like speaking in song. This is an amazing production. Orchestra backing. How must that feel? To be singing in front of a symphony. With a baritone lead, a perfect harmony duet.
I bet it's exhilarating, each and every time.
Thrumming deep vocals that strike right to the chest. You feel it, as it resonates, like a heartbeat.
But... yeah, when the drums begin... I'm just... feeling it.
Not to disregard the rest of the band, but the beat is enthralling. It pulls you in. It's a total group effort (that's why it's called a band, afterall).
I'm just, "How do you do that!?" Then, i realize I played in our family band for years. Learning, singing bluegrass, banjo, and then I'm... "Oh... right. Practice and a passion to put that practice into action."
Oh... erm, sorry if this is kindof a zombie post. I'm ex-Navy. The most dedicated, professional, this gets kinda weird, "sail-worthy," are Filipinos, Polynesians, Maori. I come from Viking stock. Other ocean.
But all of this strikes a heartchord in me. Like deeper than intuition. If that makes sense.
Fr
It takes a LOT of talent to make a song work as good as this in two so VERY different languages.
Three languages. It has Samoan, Tokelauan and English lyrics.
As an African American woman I must say this...I just love this song!
My People, my pride, my history
Beautiful
Lovely speech ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Ouaaa🇫🇯🇹🇴🇼🇸🇳🇿🇨🇰🇸🇧🇹🇻🇳🇺🇵🇬 🇻🇺 🔥🔥🔥
Tama po kau...
where u from?
Stop and just think about it for a second. Sailing the Pacific Ocean in wind powered, wooden boats! The scale is unbelievable. They did it. They repeatedly did it!
I'm Black and have zero connection to Pacific Island people, but this is AWESOME and I LOVE seeing the richness of your culture!!!
very beautiful song.. greeting from malaysia, your long distance cousin
When I listen to this with eyes closed, I travel to paradise flying over the seas and mountains!
Thank you! Loved from Philippines.
🇯🇲
We're the same I always 😢
152 people don't know the way
It's 258 now
It’s shameful people who don’t realize how important all of us all and how beautiful different cultures are all over the world 🌎
This is the way.
565 people lost the way
We now have 575 people who dont know the way lol
Not sure, what's more beautiful: The singers, their voices, the music or the whole culture itself ♥
All of the above are the best ❤️❤️❤️
Todo es hermoso ¡¡absolutamente todo; el canto, los instrumentos, los cantantes, la danza...hacen que el corazon haga un viaje sin fin!! Que hermosa cultura. Saludos desde Chiapas, México.
As a Sundanese, I got goosebumps every time I listen to this song. Imagining how my ancestors sailed all the way from Formosa to Java. I'm proud to be Austronesian.
When i was 9 yrs old i lived for one year in Tuvalu bc my dad was working on his research there. It was one of my best experiences i had in my life. Polynesian music, culture, nature and people are so beautiful and magical! at that time I discovered Te Vaka. My friends and i were dancing to the songs and i even bought a CD in Fiji on my way back to Europe. When the Disney movie "Moana" was released i had goose bumps and tears in my eyes bc i knew right away that the music is by Te Vaka. What a nostalgic moment for me. I hope that i will have the chance again to visit the beautiful Pacific Ocean. Sending lots of love!
Beautiful
What a joy to read ❤ i'm happy for you and thanks for sharing ❤
I envy you sis, as I have never seen the village that my mother's mother came from but your story fills me with so much joy that my ancestral home can spread the alofa.
Makes my heart ache in the best way x
Gave me chills... Proud to be a Pacific Islander and share the same ancestral roots of the ancient voyagers who settled the islands in the Western Pacific region!
I worked at an assisted living in Minnesota for some years. This song would move our Hawaiian resident to tears everytime, and she'd get up and move, and stretch towards the stars, and praise God.
COVID took her away from us, but I know she is singing in heaven.
God bless.
We may not be Polynesians but we Maldivians have a strong connection to the sea as well as an Island Nation.
The initial vocals feel as if we're standing in the ocean and swaying with the gentle waves of the reef. I Love it.
My daughter is 1.5 yrs old and she calls baby Moana by her own name. She's friends with Moana!
I am from Taiwan. Foreign rulers make us almost forget the culture of our ancestors. I really hope that my compatriots know "where we are", "who we are".
You guys used to be pure Polynesian...
Then the Chinese arrived. I think.
Believe it or not, the first settlers of Polynesia originated from Taiwan. You live in the original Polynesian homeland🇹🇼
@@dailealexander2055 the original land is america
@@dailealexander2055 I'm Polynesian and noooo we did not😂 a lot of people think we did but we did not. We originated mostly from really ancient times from Laminites
@@SaltySev lamanites from the book of Mormon?? Lol
I love this song. Coming from Bolivia, where we have a strong and old connection with ancestors through earth, I felt very deeply the references to ancestry, heritage and the oral passing of traditions.
Puts tears in my eyes
2:15 The smiles on their faces are trully beautiful ✨
I keep rewinding that part😍😍😍😍
As someone who have Māori DNA I can feel the goosebumps . Love from New Zealand
This song makes me so emotional I don’t know why😭
I am Diné and Lakota. I definitely feel a sense of brother/sisterhood between other indigenous peoples. When I see or hear other indigenous people sing their cultures songs or share stories it just lifts my soul.
I'm a Jewish Israeli and I completely agree. There's nothing like indigenous cultures! We have to stick together and support each other. 💚
I’m Houma and Lakota, and I feel the same way.
Ona Leigh Native Palestinians support all Native American cultures.
I’m white, and I feel that lift in my soul as well. There’s just something about them. That said, everyone on Earth is brothers and sisters. It doesn’t mean we don’t fight amongst ourselves, or anything, especially as that is common among siblings. We simply don’t see brotherhood between all people, since it’s not something we want to see. We would rather instead believe in the illusion of separation because it’s convenient. That brotherhood extends to everything on Earth as well, so it’s a shame much of modern Western culture does such a poor job of acknowledging that.
@@jonahs92 israeli ppl are not indigenous to that land. you colonizers forcefully stole land from the actual indigenous ppl there
Such a rich culture & heritage, i am a Malaysian, born in Sabah, in Borneo. Im not sure how close my ancestry to polynesian, however i can see some similarity on how we dress, how our traditional music sounds.
I'm from the Sarawak, our language belong to malayo Polynesian, proud Austronesians we are!
@@NormanThe_FreedomHope22-5 proud Dayak🙏🏼
@@daryldeanna6413 🤝
I wish this was my culture
I love how he made it a point that the Polynesians were the best sailors and navigators ever... like, Christopher Columbus WHO? He didn’t even know where America was 🤦♀️
I don't know if you're interested or just being racist, but the Polynesians were far better sailors and navigators than Columbus. Columbus had all the tools you can imagine-enormous ships, fantastic maps, written records of the winds and observations of things like driftwood that suggested a continent was across the sea, not to mention compasses and astrolabes to find his way home. The Polynesians had dugout canoes, no records but songs and myths, and no tools except their naked-eye observations of the waves and the sky. And yet they crossed an ocean three times bigger than the Atlantic and reliably found their way to tiny islands that Europeans like Columbus weren't able to return to EVEN AFTER DISCOVERING THEM four hundred years later (look up the discovery of longitude). I think anyone can see that the Romans or Egyptians who built gigantic domes, pyramids, fortresses and temples with nothing but hammers and chisels were in a meaningful sense "better builders" than modern construction workers with modern tools. In the same way-doing harder stuff with less support-the Polynesians were far better navigators and explorers than anyone who came before or after.
Blindkingofbohemia1 idk how you missed my comment but I was giving credit to the Polynesians... history books have misinformed us that Columbus discovered “new land” when in reality it was already found. And I love how he informed everyone that it’s the Polynesians that were the best at navigating.
@@ZeroAroundTheWorld haha you're completely right, I totally misread your comment. I am very sorry!
Blindkingofbohemia1 no worries! Thank you for your comment though because there was other things that I wasn’t aware of before so thank you 😊
@@Blindkingofbohemia1 may I ask what is your point of view on the portuguese navigators? That's a very interesting point of you saying all that of Polynesian, I didn't know, and makes sense if you think about it. I've learnt that portuguese were able to roam through dangerous sea paths, that many ships were known to wreck, though they had more stiff boats, probably, they weren't that great to roam such paths (knowing Atlantic is more brave than Pacific, as their name suggest) portuguese were able to roam through sea to India and China and later Japan. Also reaching Timor and Papua Nova Guiné. All that pioneering those routes. Of course they were more literate, but they invented the astrolobe. Just curious about what other people think of the great navigators of the east(?)
Out of all Disney movies, this just hits differently.
I love the nature and water elements throughout the movie.
Part of me feels like I'm actually born close to the ocean because of this💚
My ancestry is of the Viking and Sami side, this is absolutely beautiful and much love from Scandinavia ❤️
Same here. My ancestors are from Norway. We continue the tradition of sailing the beautiful oceans.
we wernt to bad at navigating the seas ourselves were we
my roots go back to denmark
Your people are just beautiful
@@pinoyprepper6530 thank you brother ❤️
@@elmo8348 so true brother. We are of the same people, and together we once were known as some of the most fearsome warriors and voyagers on the planet. It's always nice to talk with on of my Scandinavian family 🇸🇪❤️🇩🇰
I’ve never been exposed to this type of music before and I must say even tho I don’t understand the lyrics I felt this music and their voices in my heart, they just radiate joyful light, also very respectfully everybody on that stage are incredibly beautiful and good looking, I always envy indigenous people regardless of the culture or country just to be born into so much culture, history, traditions, meaning, spiritual connection is truly a gift from god, I wish I had their sense of belonging.
Guy in 2:41 is drop dead gorgeous!!!!! I'm in love!!!!!!!
I was born in the Philippines…and i know that i felt the connection with Moana as I too live near the coast and wanted to explore whats beyond that when I was a kid. This is the reason why I love Moana than any other Disney.
I visit here when I'm down to feel better♥️ and now I feel better🙂
I'm so happy to see that so many of the Pacific people can identify with the moana songs. I studied in New Zealand and learned a bit te reo maori at Waikato University. I first was a bit scared of the big Maori rugby players but I soon found out, what a soft heart they had. I really enjoyed the culture, the chants, the dancing but most of all the sweet soul of the people of Aotearoa! The Moana movie has spread that pacific spirit all over the world and whenever I hear these songs my heart starts jumping and a feeling of joy is coming over me!
I am so happy that Moana popularized a little bit Polynesian culture, Thanks Disney. Thank you Te Vaka for the soundtrack. You did an amazing job. Listen to this song and see your ancestors sailing through the ocean to find new homes.
❤Proud Polynesian.....Ancestors greatest Navigators❤
The fact that the language has been preserved and current generations can speak it and sing it is a testament to their strength, perseverance, and pride in their culture. The US did a lot of damage to this beautiful people. I get so emotional hearing this song and seeing this beautiful culture represented in such a mainstream format and it is so powerful.
It’s hard to comprehend the magnitude of what early Polynesians accomplished. While other cultures rarely dared to sail out of sight of land, they were charting a course across thousands of miles of open water. That there was traffic of any kind amongst the tiny islands in the midst of that vast forbidding sea is nothing short of astounding.
Proud Islander ! Literally any song from the islands in the Pacific makes my young heart feel the pride of being an islander, and being raised and taught about my culture. Keeps the heritage alive. Proud Micronesian 🇬🇺🇫🇲
I am not at all Polynesian but this is amazing. Watching this made me realize actually how many cultures there are out there. This song just spreads the best vibes and makes me want to dance! Love from an Italian! ❤️
We are all connected in the past. Sense of pride present in myself when I heard this song. It's so sad nowadays new generation mostly forgot their root. Ancient people always great.
I took my daughter to watch Moana when it first came out in the theater. Being far away from my home, its hard for my kid to understand what its like to be part Polynesian and when she watched the movie, she understood why I did certain things. I literally amongst cried for majority of the movie. As a Tongan, I was very proud of the work Disney done.
As a Polynesian woman from New Zealand this makes me so proud of my culture. POLYNESIAN PRIDE!! ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
Awesome! I'm Native American, we all got the same indigenous blood in us.
Jared White holy shit
I'm a Jewish Israeli and I completely agree. There's nothing like indigenous cultures! We have to stick together and support each other. 💚
@@jonahs92 please explore your statement further. U aren't indigenous in any sense of the word.
@@zahrakazmi8246 Except we are. Jews are indigenous to Judea. That's where the word Jew comes from. Arabs are indigenous to Arabia.
@@jonahs92 Most of the people settled in Israel are Eastern European. So far removed from the original exiles, that claiming to be indigenous is fraught with complications. Unless you and your near ancestors were born in modern day Israel, claiming to be indigenous has no meaning. It invalidates the struggle of the real indigenous jews who were forced from their home, and dreamed of returning.
As an Austronesian, I love this song. Our ancestors were voyagers too from Taiwan to Southeast Asia to Oceania even went as far as Madagascar. 🛶⛵
My people from the West Coast Salish have their own tales of long ships going to sea but i've never given it any thought about how we'd manage such journeys and those were nothing in comparison to the Pacific Ocean. Its so amazing to have these stories which have been passed down to us so we can truly appreciate humanity to its fullest
Although I’m not Polynesian I’m still proud of you Polynesians 😌 us pacificans will always love our culture. It is our pride. Our honor.
Much love from Micronesia 🇫🇲
I swam in the waters of the Gulf Coast at night as a young man, swimming and paddleboarding beyond the green and into the blue under the stars, with dolphins and tiger sharks. I saw the stars and felt the power of the sea. Moana really hit me hard, I was weeping during some of the songs. Hail from an Irish-American born and raised in the Alabama Gulf. We all know the way if we look.
As a malaysian people, my heritage also from voyager that travel around the world and i feel connected when i hear this beautiful song
In fact, the Pasific islanders came all the way from Formosa (now Taiwan). Malaysia is also part of it. We share the same ancestors:)
I'm a Filipino but whenever I hear this song, there's like a current striking my heart and giving me chills.
It's like we are somewhat connected
As a eastern Malays. I feel the same too..
@@kennethfernandez2577 We Filipinos are also descendants of the great ancient Austronesian sailors. It sends me chills whenever I internalize that we came from such great people and culture.
@@Auoric polynesians never called themselves austronesians
@@Auoricsorry..but you guys are not part of the Polynesian legacy 🙄
The people who lives in the Pacific knows how to live n bring happiness away from the cities this is the culture of an Islander coz I am a Islander I miss home
You know you're from the Islands when you feel so deeply for the songs from Moana. I miss my islands. Bansang Moro.
What makes this so beautiful is simple. One word.......culture. Every single culture on God’s green earth has something to bring to the table. We’ve got much more in common than we realize. God gave us a beautiful world. We just need to learn to appreciate it.
Am a Bangladeshi in Britain. Father came here on a ship in 1956 shortly after war. Dangerous back then. He sailed a voyage of 8000 odd miles. And now we have 4 generations of Welsh Bengali here because he made that voyage. Around 50 members of blood family. He’s dead now. This makes me think of him
I love Polynesian culture and this is sooo beautiful!!
As an anglo euro guy so far off from having any roots in Polynesia (that I know of) I listen to this amazing piece of musical art and emotionally feel the culture and spiritual essence of this song. As humans we have lost our connection to our true spiritual selves. Listening to this song brings peace and knowingness in my heart. Thankyou for your beautiful music and talent.
I'm not even Polynesian, but this song caries so many things... It's a beautiful culture, you guy must protect it at every cost... this is too beautiful!
The world may be modernized, but we must never forget our ancestor's roots and our culture's tradition. This song is a really good example. Truly a great and amazing song.
Love from Malaysia
makes me wonder why there isn't a Musical for Moana by now
I’m sure it’s coming. It’ll be the second Lion King
Yet...
well there’s Moana Jr now
Probably because Frozen. And Polynesia is unfortunately a culture that isn’t widely appreciated / valued in America, at least nearly as much as it should be.
@@walphish8697 Seeing as Moana was one of Disneys most popular movies in the recent decade Id say it would do pretty well
Love from Taiwan! To think our ancestors come to this beautiful island thousands of years ago and now I listen to this song just give me chill!! Love
Woooow 😍 how powerful are those lyrics though? 😱 had me jumping.
Im so proud of our Polynesian people
🇹🇰🇹🇰🇹🇰
🤙🏽
I'm Manadonese from Eastern Indonesia🇮🇩 I'm so proud being Pacific Islander🌊
I love our culture❤️
I'm a southern son, native of the Appalachian, but.... I know love and joy when I hear it, and I am so thankful to learn about this culture. Thank you 😊
Fililpinos were like that once, then the Spaniards came and erased everything. All we have is the faded memories and rare transcriptions and artifacts survived by those who were lucky enough to remember it all during the Spanish colonial period. Now we've even taken after our colonial oppressors tradition, and continue to kill and erase the culture of the natives that still live.
so negative. we still have our culture, even if it's not complete. remember the ones we have, and share it with others so they know our story. and when i speak one of the dialects (Tagalog), i try to use the native language and not the bastardized spanish word that is sometimes used.
@@gusionparsley1491 I'm not Filipino or from a colonized country but I'd like to know: In your opinion what did the Spanish change for the better? Normally, I read or hear about how things changed for the worse (like the loss of culture, native language, legends, oral history and so on - which is just horrible. There are so many beautiful thing that are just lost because the colonizers wanted to gain power and riches . And that's basically what comes to my mind when I think about colonization).
@@gusionparsley1491 filipinos were literally KILLED AND RAPED HOW WAS THAT GOOD IN ANYWAY??? put yourself in the shoes of your ancestors. imagine all of you right now having all of your freedom, your family, rights, and dignity take away by foreigners. They take everything away from you until you dont own anything anymore. Until you never get to see your friends anymore. that in one peaceful day everything you ever know changes. If that happens to you right now i dont think you would say the same. it was never about whats the "benefits" to us. it was about US being lesser humans than the Spaniards. our ancestors were real, living, victimized people.
I cry because of no reason every time. Is it same for you? There is something touch my soul and it makes me cry.
I am not even near from the place that this language is spoken. I am from Turkey.
my parents were both born and raised in samoa. When they moved here to australia, i lost a lot of touch with my roots. Im grateful that i was always surrounded with my cousins growing up but im not very educated when it comes to my own culture which makes me a bit embarrassed and regretful. I want to make my parents proud and make myself proud. When Moana first came out i was a little kid, and i just remember crying and becoming emotional through a lot of the movie, realizing how lucky i was to be apart of this beautiful culture. I want to learn all the stories there is to be told, all the words there is to be taught. I wan to learn how to properly siva. At times like this i realise how disconnected i am from my culture and how i want to learn more.
My four year old is crazy about Moana. I loved the soundtrack. A little searching and I found Te Vaka. I have fallen in love with your music and dance. It is so beautiful. My four year old sings along. She tries to sing all of the words in both languages. Thank you for sharing.
Also, can we buy this performance in the USA? I'd love to have the full video.
I'm confused, buy the performance?
@@moomoo-ke9yf buy a copy of the video of the performance.
Maybe try their website
Same with me. My daughter just one years old, but like moana so much. Always watching moana, especially during small moana in the village
@@mahoneys64 that's beautiful man for real! Music resonates with your soul. It's awful that she left you guys... I was left by my mother 28 years ago and I'm f**ked up in so many ways because of it still. She went and started a new family 10 years after she left us. She stayed with them about 15 years afterwards and up and left them all too. Got married to some new guy, left her other pair of kids and moved to Las Vegas. They now live with me. It's us 4 siblings/half siblings. 2 older, 2 younger. Abandonment is hard to cope with. 4 damaged children of hers she left behind... Do what you can if possible to get a mother figure in your daughter's life. A good woman that she can look up to and count on and to love. Everyday I wish I had that. Good luck.
The tone, pitch and clarity of the first gentleman's speaking voice...I could listen to him speak all day.
Im a Filipino woman and this music calls to me and the dance is so similar to Filipino tribal dances. 🤯 The music just gives me shivers and connects to something deep in my soul.
I have zero connection with the island but I'm from Scandinavia I have always find the Hawaiian culture so interesting and fascinating ever since I saw Lilo and Stitch. It has been a dream of mine ever since I was little to travel to Hawaii. I hope I do one day. I love this song, the language is so beautiful and the singers got amazing voices! This was beautiful to watch.
this isnt just hawaii those, its all of polynesia
I'm not a Polynesian I'm a Filipino but i like so much the songs .